Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N.J.’s first lady announces run for U.S. Senate

Candidacy positions her to be state’s 1st woman senator

- MIKE CATALINI

TRENTON, N.J. — New Jersey first lady Tammy Murphy on Wednesday launched a bid for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in next year’s contest.

Her candidacy, announced Wednesday, puts her in the running to become the first woman elected to the Senate from New Jersey. The Democratic primary already features Rep.

Andy Kim and could include Democratic U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez, who has lost significan­t party support amid federal bribery charges but has not ruled out a run in 2024.

“We need a senator who will work every single day to lower the cost of living, protect abortion rights, end the gun violence epidemic, and defend our democracy,” she said in a roughly four-minute-long video posted online.

Murphy, 58, is a constant at events alongside her husband, Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, and has taken on maternal and infant health and the environmen­t as her top issues during her time as first lady — issues she highlighte­d in her announceme­nt.

A Virginia native, and University of Virginia graduate, Tammy Murphy worked in finance at Goldman Sachs alongside Phil Murphy before the couple settled in New Jersey. They have four children.

Democrats picked up at least five seats in the Assembly in this year’s midterm legislativ­e elections, a boon for the governor who is in the final two years of his second term.

Those successes could translate into critical county support for the first lady, who campaigned alongside the governor to increase their party’s legislativ­e majorities. A number of key county party chairmen set candidate ballot positions, and support from the county party frequently leads to electoral success.

Debbie Walsh, the director of the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University said the system, which can often surprises political newcomers, could work to elect a woman to the Senate in this case.

“This is one individual woman who has the advantage here of being able to use the system that has been the challenge or the barrier to women’s participat­ion. In some ways maybe that’s the way we get the first woman in the Senate, maybe that’s the breakthrou­gh,” Walsh said.

Patricia Campos-Medina, a political activist and labor leader, said she is also considerin­g a run on the Democratic side and that she’s heard from people that they’re concerned about the possibilit­y of losing a Latino voice in the U. S. Senate if Menendez doesn’t return. She also said she thinks it’s a moment of worker activism and, like Tammy Murphy, an opportunit­y to stand up for women’s reproducti­ve rights.

On the GOP side, Mendham Mayor Christine Serrano Glassner is also seeking the Senate seat next year. New Jersey’s primary is June 4.

Murphy is well known in New Jersey’s political circles. Before the governor’s first run for office in 2017, she worked to set up a think tank he used to showcase policy ideas. She is the honorary chair of the New Jersey Council on the Green Economy and launched Nurture NJ, an initiative aimed at boosting infant and maternal health and lowering maternal mortality, with a goal of cutting maternal mortality by 50% by 2026.

A former Republican, Tammy Murphy has spoken about growing up in a GOP-leaning area of Virginia and has previously donated to that party. She became a Democrat before her husband’s run for office.

Tammy Murphy was named in a gender discrimina­tion lawsuit this year brought by state troopers who worked on the detail responsibl­e for providing security for the governor. The suit alleges that Tammy Murphy denied a trooper the use of a carriage house on Murphy’s property to pump breast milk.

In a statement this week, she denied the allegation­s as “outrageous and categorica­lly false.”

Menendez has pleaded not guilty to federal charges. Prosecutor­s have said the senator and his wife, Nadine Menendez, accepted bribes of cash, gold bars and a luxury car over the past five years from three New Jersey businessme­n in exchange for a variety of corrupt acts. He’s also accused of being an unregister­ed agent on behalf of Egypt.

He hasn’t said whether he’ll seek reelection in 2024 but said after being indicted that he’s “not going anywhere.”

Menendez criticized Tammy Murphy in a statement Wednesday for being a “card-carrying Republican for years” and said she’d have to answer for the policies of her husband’s administra­tion, echoing similar attacks the GOP tried against the governor in his 2021 reelection bid.

“I’ll gladly put my record of success on behalf of the people of New Jersey against anyone,” he said.

“We need a senator who will work every single day to lower the cost of living, protect abortion rights, end the gun violence epidemic, and defend our democracy.” —Tammy Murphy, first lady of New Jersey

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